Ohio State President E. Gordon Gee said this afternoon that he plans to retire on July 1, an
announcement which followed the latest in a series of verbal gaffes that he said were meant as
harmless jokes but ended up embarrassing the university.

The two-time Ohio State president made his announcement this afternoon in an email to students,
faculty and staff.

“Without question, the university has achieved remarkable success, and it has been my honor
and calling to lead it,” Gee’s email says. “Ohio State is well-positioned for the future. I love
this university, and my relationship with it will continue.”

Gee, 69, has served as
Ohio State’s president for two terms, from 1990 to 97 and 2007 to
now.

OSU Provost Joseph A. Alutto has agreed to serve as interim president until the Ohio State board
of trustees can find a replacement. Alutto previously served as interim president in 2007.

Gee insisted that he wasn't retiring because he made jokes about Catholics, other schools and a
rival athletic conference during a December speech.

"This isn't about those statements," he said during a phone call with reporters this afternoon.
"I have apologized for those remarks and feel incredibly sorry, but I have moved on."

Instead, he characterized his decision to leave OSU as a celebration of the 33 years, almost
half his life, that he has been a university president,

He added that he is "quirky as hell" and doesn't do things like most people, even cracking that
"I only have a month to ruin the university."

However, Gee conceded that his discussions with his family were spurred by the "tumultuous
times." Gee said he talked about his future and what he should do while on a Disney Cruise with his
daughter and her family, including his 7-month-old twin granddaughters.

He said leaving now gives Ohio State a unique opportunity to hire Alutto as interim president
before he accepted another job offer. Late last month, the Columbus Board of Education met
privately to discuss hiring Alutto to become acting superintendent, replacing Gene Harris at the
end of the next month. The board was to vote on the matter tonight. Alutto, who was also on the
call, wouldn't confirm today whether he had been offered the job.

Columbus school board member Mike Wiles said it's obvious to him that Alutto cannot do both jobs
at once.

"I guess we punt," Wiles said, noting that Harris now leaves her post July 1. "I have no clue
what board management, leadership, is thinking at this point. Now here we are three weeks out with
no candidate."

OSU Board Chairman Robert H. Schottenstein said during the call with reporters that Gee is loved
by the university. He said Gee has instilled enormous optimism in its leaders to make Ohio
State not only better but great.

Gee’s total annual compensation is a little more than $2.1 million. In 2012, according to the
Chronicle of Higher Education, he was the third highest-paid university leader in the nation. In
prior years, he was the top earner. After a week of apologizing to people he offended with jokes
bout Catholics, other universities and a rival athletic conference, Gee announced yesterday that he
was backing out of giving Saturday’s commencement speech at St. Francis DeSales, a Catholic high
school on the North Side on Monday.

During the meeting, he referred to “those damn Catholics” and joked that priests at Notre Dame
are holy on Sunday but “holy hell” the rest of the week. He also suggested that the University of
Louisville has poor academic integrity and that those in the Southeastern Conference can’t read or
write. He also took jabs at schools, such as the University of Cincinnati, that he said are
unworthy of joining the Big Ten.

After Gee’s December comments, Ohio State trustees met in private on January 31 and March 8 to
discuss a remediation plan that directs Gee to scale back on his public speeches. The board also
said the university should hire a “coach” to help Gee do his job, an interesting proposition
considering that Gee accepted an award from the American Council on Education in March for his
years of dedication as a mentor and coach for several prospective future college leaders.

University officials say the board never took any public action at either of the meetings, but
two days after the last one, two trustees sent Gee a letter outlining the plan. In a statement last
week, OSU board chairman Robert H. Schottenstein said “the board took swift action” and “has met
with President Gee at length to discuss the ramifications of his statements and develop a plan that
addresses these missteps.”

But this past Monday, Sauders said “the conversations between members of the board and President
Gee, as well as specific details regarding the president’s progress on his remediation plan, are
private personnel matters.” She declined to say why the university believes the information is
private.

Throughout his apologies, Gee has maintained that the comments were meant to break the tension
and were a “poor attempt at humor” that ended up having the opposite effect.

In a news release this afternoon, Gee said “I recently returned from a vacation with my family,
during which time I had a chance to consider the university’s phenomenal achievements and the road
that lies ahead for it.”

He said the university has a richness of new opportunities that most universities would
envy.

“During my days away, I also spent some time in self-reflection. And after much deliberation, I
have decided it is now time for me to turn over the reins of leadership to allow the seeds that we
have planted to grow,” he said. “It is also time for me to reenergize and refocus myself."

As the controversy surrounding Gee's comments began to unfold Thursday, Ohio Gov. John Kasich
defended Gee and said, "This too shall pass, and Gordon will be there."

Five days later, Gee proved Kasich incorrect.

Gee has led more colleges — West Virginia, the University of Colorado, Ohio State, Brown and
Vanderbilt — than any other university president in the United States.

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Dispatch
reporters Bill Bush and Joe Vardon also contributed to this story.